Astronomers discover first earth-sized planet

WASHINGTON - For decades astronomers have been searching for a world like our own outside the solar system that could host alien life.And now they have announced that they have found one - a planet 1.1 times the size of Earth orbiting a star just 490 light years away. Called Kepler-186f, the planet is the first to be discovered with the right conditions for liquid water to exist on its surface, meaning it could support alien life as well.The find was made by a team of astronomers led by Elisa Quintana of the SETI Institute at Nasa Ames Research Center, who pored through planetary data from Nasa’s Kepler space telescope.To date, the telescope has found hundreds of planets, but most are uninhabitable worlds that are either too large or orbit too close to their host star to support life. The discovery of Kepler-186f, therefore, is a big milestone in the field of planet hunting. It is the fifth and outermost world of the planetary system around red dwarf star Kepler-186 and is almost certainly a rocky planet.The find is significant because it is the first Earth-sized world we’ve found in the habitable zone of a star. Habitable zones, also known as ‘Goldilocks zones’, are regions around a star where the temperature is just right for water to form. Earth, for example, sits almost bang in the middle of our sun’s habitable zone.Although previously we have found exoplanets (worlds outside the solar system) in these zones, none have been the same size as Earth. As our planet is known to have life, it stands to reason that a similar planet may also be habitable. This could make Kepler-186f the first world we’ve found that might host life as we know it.The Goldilocks zone, or habitable zone, is the belt around a star where temperatures are ideal for liquid water to pool on a planet’s surface. To determine the location of a star’s habitable zone, scientists have to first learn how much total radiation it emits. They can calculate this by knowing the size and type of the star. They can then estimate a region where it might not be too hot or too cold for water to form.‘Taking our planet as an example, water is pretty important for life,’ Dr Steve Howell, one of the lead authors on the study that found Kepler-186f and a scientist on the Kepler mission, tells MailOnline. This makes the discovery of a planet that could have water all the more important. ‘Kepler 186f will likely provide our first opportunity to search for alien life beyond the solar system.’The planet orbits an M-type dwarf star, one that is slightly dimmer than our own sun, making its habitable zone hug it slightly tighter. But Kepler-186f is on a slightly different orbit than Earth, taking 130 days to make it around the star. This places it towards the edge of the habitable zone of Kepler-186.The other four planets in the system have orbits lasting three to 21 days, making them inhospitable. Kepler-186f is at the right distance from the star for water to form,’ Thomas Barclay, a research scientist on the Kepler mission and another author on the paper announcing the discovery of the planet, tells MailOnline. Barclay was involved in modelling the planet and discerning what we think it could look like, as shown in the artist’s impressions. ‘We looked at the kind of light coming from the star, which is slightly redder than our sun,’ he explains. ‘So we tried to cover the planet in the right colour light, so the planet looks slightly more orangey. ‘We tried to work out what sort of colour the ocean would be, so with less blue light the oceans would be duller, not a bright blue like our own planet.‘Then we have the clouds and ice, which are very reasonable assumptions to exist if there’s an atmosphere. ‘These would reflect the same colour as the star – our clouds are white because the sun is white. ‘So on Kepler-186f they would appear orangey and red.’ While it’s known the planet is in the habitable zone, astronomers can’t be sure with absolute certainty it has water. Extrapolating on what we know from Earth, however, Kepler-186f is a prime candidate for being a world with oceans and seas.That would be dependent on it having an atmosphere, though. ‘If we didn’t have an atmosphere, we wouldn’t have liquid water,’ says Barclay. ‘It blankets us and traps heat. ‘The same would happen on Kepler-186f.’ And if there is plant life on this planet, Barclay says it would again be different to what we have on Earth. ‘We did think about what colour the plant life might be due to photosynthesis. ‘The best guess is they would be more yellow, due to the different colour of the star.‘The plants would be yellow because it’s to do with the energy coming in and being reflected.’ Both Barclay and Howell say that this world is probably more like a cousin to Earth than a direct twin. It has similar characteristics but it orbits a different star. With upcoming telescopes like Nasa’s James Webb Space Telescope, launching in 2018, we might be able to observe the atmospheres of planets like these closer to us and find out if they have similar chemical compositions to our own.